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and Press Releases
15 November 2007
Tracerco at cutting edge of Flow Assurance Techniques
One of the UK’s leading process and measurement diagnostic
specialists, Tracerco, has put its technology to the test
during groundbreaking oil and gas projects.
The company’s flagship level measurement instrument
the TRACERCO Profiler™ (the Profiler) has an established
reputation for regularly being used in many upstream three-phase
oil and gas separation processes. More recently, the company’s
team of experts were called in to modify the unit to be
used in a unique subsea processing application as part of
the Tordis Improved Oil Recovery (IOR) system and to help
an oil and gas major eliminate hits on its crude oil tower
at a refinery though novel design allowing use in a desalter
vessel.
The Tordis Improved Oil Recovery (IOR) system, which was
commissioned by Statoil, is the world’s first full
field subsea separation, boosting and injection system.
It is at the cutting edge of design and technology and owes
much of its success to the strong working partnership between
FMC Technologies and Tracerco, part of the Johnson Matthey
Group.
The collaboration has resulted in an impressive subsea
separation monitoring system that combines Tracerco’s
separator measurement experience with FMC Technologies’
knowledge of subsea process design and project execution.
In 2005 Statoil contracted FMC Technologies to deliver
a full-field separation facility to enable reinjection of
bulk water into a non-hydrocarbon reservoir and send hydrocarbons
through a multi-phase pump back to the Gullfaks C platform.
By installing a full-field subsea separation facility, Statoil
expects to improve the Tordis Field’s recovery factor
from 49% to 55%. Along with other upgrades to the field,
FMC’s separation system will allow Statoil to extract
roughly 35 MMbbl extra from the Tordis Field.
Six of Tracerco’s state-of-the-art separator level
measurement instruments are central to the project and are
being used in the separator and desander vessels. The company
has more than 40 years experience in developing innovative
specialist measurement solutions and has redesigned its
topside Profiler unit to cope with the subsea environment.
Andy Hurst, managing director at Tracerco said: “This
is a hugely exciting project and we are delighted to be
involved. During the next decade, subsea-separating techniques
will be used more and more as operators try to make the
most of hydrocarbon reserves. The Tordis project will not
only make this activity more viable but also sets the industry
standard for this type of activity. Through subsea separating
technology, energy firms will have the opportunity to maximise
well returns and ensure the longevity of field life.”
The Profiler works by giving a density profile of the cross
section of the vessel and then gives a visual interpretation
of the data much in the same way an MRI scanner would provide
a slice of a human body, essentially giving the operator
“insight onsite”. The scan of the vessel provides
a range of data that can be interpreted to identify the
oil / water interface and any emulsion / foaming layers
that may be forming.
The unit is based on the gamma radiation absorption principle,
using long-term stable Geiger-Muller detectors and consists
of a number of density measurement detectors, installed
vertically inside the separator vessel. The measured change
in density – the process profile – is presented
graphically to the operator. The measured interface levels
from Digital Control System (DCS) input for separator control
and shutdown, include foam, liquid, emulsion, water and
sand levels. The information provided by the subsea profiler
gives engineers the most accurate vision of the density
patterns in the vessel and helps maximise efficiency.
Tracerco was also called in to help a major oil and gas
operator prevent unplanned shutdowns during the refining
of crude oil. The company was able to develop its existing
Profiler unit to address the unique requirements of the
operator’s refinery. Tracerco invested more than a
year in the development of the technology, which is now
being used as an integral part of a desalter unit and it
has produced unprecedented results.
Since being installed, the Profiler has eliminated all
unplanned desalter shutdowns at the refinery, enabling the
company to dramatically increase the number of barrels it
can refine per day and significantly reduce chemical usage.
Andy Hurst, managing director of Tracerco said: “This
really is a unique partnership and we are delighted that
the Profiler has produced such fantastic results. We were
approached by the operator to provide a unit to help reduce
their crude tower water hits. The temperature and pressure
requirements meant that we couldn’t use existing technology
but had to use our wealth of experience to develop a new,
specialized unit”.
Tracerco has proven experience of using the Profiler at
temperatures of approximately 150°C but it had never
before been faced with adapting the technology to cope with
temperatures of upwards of 250°C.
“The high temperatures and pressures involved were
a real challenge for us as it was above the allowable intrinsically
safe certification temperature of 125°C,” added
Hurst. “We were able to over come the temperature
issues by incorporating a specialist closed loop cooling
system to the Profiler. The cooling system was a particular
challenge as it had to meet with Tracerco’s design
ethos of minimal maintenance requirements. But, with a lot
of time spent in research and development, we have come
up with a proven reliable and robust solution”
The function of the desalter vessel is to remove suspended
salt crystals and water in the crude feed. Salt is naturally
present in the oil when it is produced in an oil field.
When oil is distilled at a refinery, it is heated to over
426?C, causing the salt to become very corrosive. To remove
the salt, wash water is added to the incoming crude feed,
the emulsion this creates must then be quickly separated
inside the desalter. Salty water is then discharged out
of the bottom and the desalted / dehydrated crude is discharged
out of the top of the vessel.
The oil discharged must be less than 0.5% water, otherwise
when heated it could over pressurize the distillation column.
To ensure oil dehydration, electrostatic grids are added
to maximise coalescence. But, if too much water reaches
the grids it could cause them to electrically overload and
shutdown. To prevent this, emulsion breaking chemicals are
added to the incoming crude to assist in oil/water separation.
The continuous change of oil/water concentrations make it
very difficult to optimize the process and if salt crystals
reach a distillation column, the damage could be extensive.
With the view inside the vessel, the Profiler gave the
operators confidence in the operation of the vessel and
allowed the operations team to raise the oil / water interface
higher in the vessel near to the electrostatic grid. Once
this was achieved a much smaller emulsion layer with a clean
water outlet and no process upsets was quickly seen.
The Profiler is just one of a suite of products and services
that Tracerco provides As part of its Precision Diagnostics
portfolio of services there is a range of other monitoring
techniques that can be used to ensure the effective flow
of oil and gas through an oil & gas processing facility
or pipeline. The techniques are non-intrusive and can be
used to accurately diagnose processing problems.
For instance, as remaining reserves of oil and gas become
more difficult to access and fields that were thought previously
uneconomic to develop become viable there is an increasing
requirement to attain longer subsea tiebacks to production
facilities. The flow lines involved in longer tiebacks will
become more prone to blockage from deposition such as hydrates
or waxes. It is therefore important that if these deposits
and blockages do form that they can be examined and quantified
so that the appropriate intervention action can be taken.
Tracerco uses three key techniques: gamma-ray transmission
scanning for accurate point measurements, tomography measurements
for detailed density mapping of pipeline contents and radioisotope
tracer injections to determine deposit profiles and inventory
over long distances.
Using basic scanning techniques used in topside processing,
the amount of deposit can be determined from outside of
the pipeline, the problem arises though when the pipeline
is buried as in many subsea applications. Therefore, tracer
techniques, similar to a barium meal used in medical technology
can be used to determine deposit location.
Should further more detailed investigations be required
then a technique similar to that of a CAT scan, tomography,
can be used to give a picture of the inside of the pipe.
The gamma-ray transmission technique, TRACERCO Diagnostics™
Scan, uses a small sealed source and a sensitive radiation
detector positioned on adjacent sides of the pipe. The measured
radiation intensity is directly related to the amount of
deposit in the pipeline.
The tomography scanning technique, TRACERCO Diagnostics™
ThruVision, is an advanced method of gamma-ray scanning.
Multiple scans around a pipeline’s circumference using
a single point source and a phased array of sensitive radiation
detectors enables a very detailed map of pipeline contents
to be produced. By doing numerous scans, many intersection
points are created like a child’s spirograph, each
of these intersections has a relative density which is equated
by a highly sophisticated computer programme and are used
to create a density map. These on-line, non-intrusive testing
methods and use of small levels of material, mean that there
is no disruption to normal operations.
The tracer injection technique requires the injection of
a small sharp pulse of low activity radioactive tracer into
the line, enabling the fluid velocity between externally
mounted radiation detector loggers to be measured to better
than 0.1% accuracy. Comparing this to the pipeline flow
rate for the duration of the test enable the amounts of
deposit between successive detectors to be calculated. Unsealed
radioisotope tracing techniques are regularly used for checking
or calibration of installed flowmeters, measurement of flow
in systems where no flowmeters are installed and flow distribution
studies in multiflow systems. The tracer used is designed
to follow a particular material through a system. Sensitive
radiation detectors are placed on the outside surface of
a pipe and detect the unsealed tracer presence upon its
flow past specific positions. These measurements can be
used to directly measure fluid velocity, flow rate, phase
distribution and deposit inventory.
Last year Tracero was requested to help a Floating Production
Storage and Offloading (FPSO) vessel in the North Sea to
locate a restriction in a subsea production system that
was affecting production. The deposit location was known
to be somewhere between the subsea manifold and the FPSO
but how much of a restriction was unkown. The platform had
tried pouring glycol into the system to remedy the situation
with no effect. As a result, further information was required
so that correct intervention action could be chosen.
Basic gamma scanning was first used on the flexible riser
system at half meter intervals with scans being taken in
the 3, 6, 9 and 12 o’clock positions.
Within six hours of being onboard the platform, the location
of the deposit had been found and the extent of the problem
quantified. A large amount of deposit was found at the bottom
of the loop with some moderate build up of deposit in the
verticle section. From the information supplied, the platform
was able to determine that retro jetting was applicable
to the scenario and subsequently a retro jetting skid was
mobilized and the deposit cleared.
Radioisotope technology offers powerful and well-proven
inspection techniques for accurately measuring the amount
and location of pipeline contents such as waxes or hydrate
deposits, in instances where pipeline conditions are uncertain.
Until recently these direct, non-intrusive measurements
of pipeline contents were thought impossible, but the technology
is now being used by many operators and its use is rapidly
growing around the world.
Tracerco has developed an in-depth experience of flow assurance
techniques during the last 40 years. It remains at the cutting
edge of this specialist area, providing technical assistance
to a broad spectrum of oil and gas related clients.
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